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CPEC – Kohala Dam Project AJK – Documentary

Feasibility

Pakistan’s Water and Power Development Authority had awarded a contract for study and design of the 1100 to 1200 MW Kohala Dam hydroelectric project on Pakistan’s Jhelum River.

Snowy Mountains Engineering Corp. (SMEC) of Australia had to prepare a feasibility study, detailed engineering design, and tender documents for the project, to be built in Azad-Jammu-Kashmir State.

The two-year study had included comprehensive analysis of the project’s requirements – engineering, power optimization, transmission, geotechnical, economic, financial, social, and environment. It was SMEC’s first major hydropower project work in Pakistan.

Kohala Dam is a dam on the upper branch of the Jhelum, 40 kilometers from Muzaffarabad and a powerhouse on the lower branch of the Jhelum near Barasala.

Construction

China Three Gorges Corporation (CTGC) announced today, it will develop the planned 1,100-MW Kohala hydropower project, a run-of-river scheme that will be built on the Jhelum River in Azad-Jammu-Kashmir (AJK).

Pakistan’s Water and Power Development Authority (WPDA) owns the Kohala Dam project, scheduled for commissioning in 2023.

AJK is a self-governing administrative division of Pakistan west of the Indian-administered state of Jammu and Kashmir.

In 2014, Pakistan’s National Transmission and Dispatch Co. and China International Water and Electric Corp. (CWE) – a subsidiary of CTGC — finalized a 30-year tariff at 7.9 cents per unit and estimate the project will cost about US$2.4 billion.

The Kohala Dam Project will have a gravity, roller-compacted-concrete dam on the upper branch of the Jhelum, 40 km from Muzaffarabad. The powerhouse, on the lower branch of the Jhelum near Barasala, will house four 275-MW Pelton turbines.

CWE is required to construct the Kohala Dam Project on a build, own, operate and transfer basis. In 2014, local published reports said the average tariff for the first 12 years was set at 8.9 cents per unit and during the following 18 years would be 5.1 cents per unit. The average tariff for the 30-year life of the project is 7.9 cents per unit.

The tariff ensures 17 per cent return on equity on internal rate of return basis. The project is expected to earn carbon credit from the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change for clean energy development under the Kyoto protocol.

CTGC said the Kohala Dam Project is its largest investment in the Pakistani hydropower market.

The project is part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a 3,000-km-long network of roads, railways and energy infrastructure to assist development in Pakistan and boost growth for the Chinese-border economy.